Marvel's Agents of SHIELD 2.01: Shadows
Jed Whedon and Maurissa Tancharoen
Vincent Misiano
The second season premiere of Agents of SHIELD makes a statement. And that statement is: “we’re going to
continue on the path we set at the end of the first season, we’re going to own
our limitations, and we’re going to kick ass doing it”. The post-Winter
Soldier invigoration and identity for the series continues to evolve, and
that helps to set the series apart from more critically beloved rivals.
Coulson’s team is now in disarray, as the
fight against Hydra continues. Coulson
has a few more allies, but it doesn’t help that Hydra is all over the place and
entrenched with greater numbers and greater influence. The most notable addition for the premiere is
Lucy Lawless’ agent Isabelle Hartly, who may or may not survive past the end of
this episode. That would be a shocking
turn of events, though it wouldn’t be the first time a character was apparent
dead and came back different.
Getting the best makeover of the original
crew is Skye, who comes across as far more confident in her various dealing
throughout the premiere. Most notable is
her approach with Ward; he’s unfortunately still besotted with her, but Skye isn’t
letting down her guard. Depending on how
they play out Ward’s potential bid for redemption, Skye’s character development
may be one of the keys to the season. I
would love to see some of her detractors (and haters, to be honest) eat a
little humble pie.
Winning the vote for Most Tragic Return is
Fitz, who seemed to be only mildly damaged early on, but is apparently
scrambled in all manner of ways. The
split with Simmons is heartbreaking, yet Coulson’s realization that Fitz isn’t
going to simply recover feels less like a farewell than a starting point for a
new quest. It wouldn’t surprise me if
Simmons is actually out there searching for some hint at a treatment or cure,
which given Coulson’s fears regarding his and Skye’s TAHITI situation, may
point to a deeper rift.
In terms of connections to the larger Marvel
mythos, fleshing out the MCU, the main villain of the premiere was Crusher
Creel, aka The Absorbing Man. I thought
they did a nice job of translating that problematic character into the
universe, albeit on a television budget.
I’m quite curious why this particular 0-8-4 artifact is so desirable,
and what it actually does. (I note that
the design is vaguely similar to the shape of Ronon’s ship in Guardians of the Galaxy, so is it Kree
technology?) There’s also the appearance
(in both past and present) of Daniel Whitehall, aka Kraken, who is a relatively
recent addition to the comics universe.
- The strengths from the end of the first season continue
- The flashbacks were a particular highlight
- Ward’s love for Skye is still a bit irritating
- Not enough May. There’s never enough May.